Aircraft Carriers III

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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was refloated on 5 Dec after 9 months in the
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Sound Naval Shipyard drydock. She'll return to service in 2019, probably won't deploy again until 2020 ...

... etc., which I guess means she'll serve in 2020s and beyond

100% Correct. You get a cyber cookie.:rolleyes:

Does anyone have pictures of this?
This is exactly what i meant. I saw it somewhere before that they remodeled the tower to the newer units.

There is a video of the radar tower behind the island being removed and refurbished on CVN-73, But not Nimitz. In the video below mention is made of the radar tower being removed and refurbished aboard CVN-72.


I use to be acquainted with someone that told me about the island being removed and redone. That's what I was told. I'm trying to find photos.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
I just spent some time looking for any photos or videos of the island being removed from any Nimitz class. I did find videos of the islands being installed aboard QE (R 08) and GRF (CVN 78). I'm beginning to think my "friend" who was aboard Nimitz was yanking my chain!
 
carriers related (I mean directly) parts of
The 19 things you need to watch in 2019
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:

4. Homeport swaps
Three Navy aircraft carriers and three amphibious warships, plus their crews and families, will be prepping to swap homeports or will be on the move in 2019.

The 36-year-old aircraft carrier Carl Vinson will likely
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for a planned incremental availability maintenance stint at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, joining the Navy’s oldest operational flattop, the Nimitz, in the state of Washington.

Meanwhile, the carrier Stennis will depart Washington in May to prepare for an overhaul in Virginia, according to Navy Personnel Command.

And the carrier Abraham Lincoln is expected to leave Norfolk for San Diego, too.

Forward-deployed to Japan for just less than a year, the amphibious warship Wasp
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and return to Norfolk, replaced by the America, which will bid farewell to San Diego.

It’s part of a three-port swap orchestrated two years ago that also involves the Wasp-class amphib Bonhomme Richard, which also called Sasebo home before May.

That’s when the warship completed its homeport shift to San Diego and began prepping for an extended modernization spell at the nearby General Dynamics National Steel and Shipbuilding yard.

The Pentagon hoped the movements of the three vessels would be completed in 2018 but the Navy Personnel Command’s Decommissioning and Homeport Change webpage marked May 25, 2019 as the effective date for the America’s switch to Sasebo.
and
6. More Ford flattops
Dogged by technology glitches and pummeled by critics for its $12.8 billion price tag, the aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford not only is expected to enjoy a banner year in 2019
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.

The lead ship in its carrier class, the Ford is scheduled to leave its post-shakedown maintenance session at Huntington Ingalls Newport News Shipyard and head back to sea in late 2019.

Navy officials have told lawmakers that fixes to the Ford’s high-tech electromagnetic catapult system, EMALS, and its Advanced Arresting Gear recovery system will be completed and the warship’s advanced radar installed.

Technicians also are exorcising the demons that haunted the flattop’s weapons elevators.

Ford’s sister carrier, the John F. Kennedy, is expected to be christened by the end of 2019. At the end of November, 84 percent of the flattop’s structure was finished.

Congress capped the Kennedy’s costs at around $11.4 Billion, cheaper than the Ford.

It’s why the Navy is wrapping up a deal with Huntington Ingalls to build two more to replace the aging fleet of Nimitz-class carriers.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
I just spent some time looking for any photos or videos of the island being removed from any Nimitz class. I did find videos of the islands being installed aboard QE (R 08) and GRF (CVN 78). I'm beginning to think my "friend" who was aboard Nimitz was yanking my chain!

yep, he was thinking the "Radar Mast".... they cut BIG holes in the deck for refueling, got any pictures of that??
 
Mar 19, 2018
I refrain from commenting on what I now read which is Navy, Newport News Taking Steps Towards Two-Carrier Buy
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and
Navy Could Award 2-Carrier Contract by End of January, With Expected $4B in Savings
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The clock is now counting down for the Navy to award Newport News Shipbuilding a two-aircraft carrier contract, after the Pentagon formally notified Congress on Dec. 31 that it wanted to pursue the first dual-carrier contract since the late 1980s.

The Navy has been
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, saying it had the potential to save as much as $2.5 billion in the deal and more recently stating the deal would save even more than that. Newport News Shipbuilding too said it wanted the deal, but the Pentagon didn’t sign off on it until the Dec. 31 letter to lawmakers.

On Monday the Pentagon sent a certification letter to Congress that outlines the contracting strategy and how much time and money it would allow the Navy to save on hulls CVN-80 and CVN-81. A congressional staffer told USNI News that the combined contracting could save the Navy about $4 billion, well above the original estimates.

With that letter sent, the Navy could award the contract by the end of January.

A Navy spokesman told USNI News that “the Navy has reached a price agreement with Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Newport News Shipbuilding for a two-carrier buy of CVN-80 and 81. Further information will be available upon contract award.”

Under the National Defense Authorization Act of Fiscal Year 2019, lawmakers agreed the Navy may enter into a two-carrier contract for CVNs 80 and 81 as long as the secretary of defense certifies at least 30 days ahead of the award of the contract that “the use of such a contract will result in significant savings compared to the total anticipated costs of carrying out the program through annual contracts,” that funding will be available in the budget to allow for both hulls’ purchase, that the design is stable and there is no excessive technical risk, and that the contract will be a fixed-price contract.

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that the letter had been sent from the Pentagon to Congress.

Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), a Senate Armed Services Committee member and a proponent of the two-carrier buy from the Virginia-based Newport News Shipbuilding yard, said in a Dec. 31 statement that “I’m thrilled the Navy has decided to pursue a block buy for aircraft carriers, something I’ve been advocating to save billions in taxpayer dollars and offer more certainty to the Hampton Roads defense community. This smart move will save taxpayer dollars and help ensure the shipyards can maintain a skilled workforce to get the job done. Newport News builds the finest carriers in the world, and I know they are ready to handle this increase in work as we make progress toward the Navy’s goal of a 355-ship fleet.”

Newport News Shipbuilding did not issue a statement this week regarding the certification letter being sent to lawmakers.
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, said that “we believe the most effective way to reduce cost of aircraft carriers is to take a multi-ship purchase approach and build them every three to four years. Buying two ships at once stabilizes the Newport News Shipbuilding workforce and their national supplier base, allows us to buy materials in quantity, and phase work more efficiently.”
 

Obi Wan Russell

Jedi Master
VIP Professional
I've never seen that. Those type photos would be classified.
I'd imagine the 'holes' to access the reactor would be in the hangar deck, not the flight deck, and that in itself would give an added layer of secrecy. Reactors aren't nearly as big as you'd think, it's the supporting infrastructure and shielding that takes up space. The average Nuclear Submarine reactor is the size of a domestic dustbin...
 
Yesterday at 8:52 PM
Mar 19, 2018
and
Navy Could Award 2-Carrier Contract by End of January, With Expected $4B in Savings
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related:
Pentagon notifies Congress of two-carrier buy, contract expected by end of January
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The US Department of Defense has officially notified the Congress of its intention to buy two aircraft carriers at once in a move that is expected to bring some $4 billion in savings.

In a letter on December 31, the Pentagon formally informed the Congress about the block buy of two Ford-class aircraft carriers.

US Senator Tim Kaine, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, welcomed the announcement.

“This smart move will save taxpayer dollars and help ensure the shipyards can maintain a skilled workforce to get the job done. Newport News builds the finest carriers in the world, and I know they are ready to handle this increase in work as we make progress toward the Navy’s goal of a 355-ship fleet,” Kaine said.

Following the confirmation, the navy could award the official contract by the end of January, according to
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.

The announcement on December 31 follows a request for proposals from March 2018 in which the US Naval Sea Systems Command asked Huntington Ingalls Industries – Newport News Shipbuilding (HII-NNS), the sole builder of aircraft carriers in the US, to provide more details on potential cost savings with a two-ship buy of Ford-class carriers CVN 80 and CVN 81.

The two-ship buy is a contracting strategy the navy has used in the 1980s to procure Nimitz-class aircraft carriers and achieved acquisition cost savings compared to contracting for the ships individually.

Ford-class aircraft carriers are the first new US Navy aircraft carrier class in more than 40 years and will begin the phased replacement of Nimitz-class carriers. The Ford-class features a new nuclear power plant, a redesigned island, electromagnetic catapults, improved weapons movement, an enhanced flight deck capable of increased aircraft sortie rates.

Measuring 1,100 foot (335 meters) in length and displacing 100,000 tonnes, Ford-class ships will operate with a smaller crew than a Nimitz-class carrier.

USS Gerald R Ford, the lead ship in the class, is scheduled to reach operational capability in 2020.
 
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